I was involved in installing a metal framed ground mount 10kwp PV system recently The inverters were sited 100m away in the property and the DC was run to the inverters from the ground mount in standard SWA in to a double insulated DC isolators at both ends of the cable run and then double insulated flex to the inverter and flex to the panels.

The property was PME.

There didn't seem to be any consideration in the design about the earthing/grounding of the SWA or array frame in the case of it becoming live in a fault NB this would be on the DC side.

Given that the d.c. side is normally separated from earth, then protection probably isn't by EEBADS (even if it was fused at the panel end, the variability of supply current would make ADS pretty unreliable anyway).

So presuming the d.c. is separated, it would take two faults to pose a danger (1st fault would simply earth one of the live conductors, TN style) - it wouldn't obviously pose an unacceptable risk.

I guess we can debate whether it comes under section 413 or 418.3 (personally if there several exposed-conductive-parts within reach of each other, I might be tempted to bond them together (but not deliberately to earth), in case of two faults of opposite polarity).